Antianginózna liecba u stabilnej formy anginy pectoris s dôrazom na nitráty
[Anti-angina treatment in stable forms of angina pectoris with emphasis on nitrates]
Jazyk slovenština Země Česko Médium print
Typ dokumentu anglický abstrakt, časopisecké články, přehledy
PubMed
15641233
- MeSH
- angina pectoris farmakoterapie MeSH
- isosorbiddinitrát farmakokinetika terapeutické užití MeSH
- lidé MeSH
- nitroglycerin farmakokinetika terapeutické užití MeSH
- vazodilatancia farmakokinetika terapeutické užití MeSH
- Check Tag
- lidé MeSH
- Publikační typ
- anglický abstrakt MeSH
- časopisecké články MeSH
- přehledy MeSH
- Názvy látek
- isosorbiddinitrát MeSH
- nitroglycerin MeSH
- vazodilatancia MeSH
Current evidence strongly suggests that coronary atherosclerosis is a common denominator in patients with stable effort angina pectoris. The concept of pathophysiology of coronary atherosclerosis is presented--angiographic and pathologic evidence now suggest presence of eccentric and irregular atherosclerotic lesions (sometimes associated with plaque rupture) and simultaneously present endothelial dysfunction increases sensitivity of vascular smooth muscles to physical and biochemical stimuli with propensity to spasm. Ischemia is due to an increased myocardial oxygen demand (increased heart rate or blood pressure) that cannot be met because of fixed coronary reserve. The organic nitrates are important drugs for the treatment of patients wit angina. The mechanism(s) of their action is presented--biotransformation and liberation of nitric oxide which stimulates guanylyl cyclase and conversion of GTP (by guanylyl cyclase) to cGMP, which causes vasodilatation but reduces platelet adhesion and aggregation too. Sublingual nitroglycerin and isosorbide dinitrate are effective in the treatment of acute episodes of angina. Long-acting nitrate preparations are effectiveness include intermittent transdermal nitroglycerin, standard formulation and sustained-release isosorbid dinitrate (but better isosorbid-5-mononitrate because of longer duration of action of action and no 1st pass hepatic metabolism) (nitrate-free interval should be of 8-10 hours duration). The place of the therapy with betablockers and calcium channel blockers in angina pectoris is presented as well and their combination with nitrates.